Maybe - but I seem to recall also checking out Debian testing also = no joy.
Maybe - but I seem to recall also checking out Debian testing also = no joy.
+1 on OCI free tier (ARM) - works like a charm. No need to spend those $5 a month of what OP want’s to do.
Look at the VMware Broadcom merger. The price went way up and companies paid it anyway. However some did switch to the cloud or some other hypervisor.
It is not all of us Enterprises that “just paid”. We chose a migration project over “just paying” Broadcom and would not call it a merger, but rather a takeover.
We are using 845 G8/9/10/11 (AMDs) at work and from my testing with Ubuntu 22.04 LTS I have the opposite experience - nothing works. First problem as I recall (+1 year since I tested) was wifi driver problems.
Don’t care if it’s Apple, M$ or Google - non of them should do it that way.
Are running 2 Dell’s at home with Linux desktop on them. A 7280 and a 7480 model. Support for drivers etc just works. Dell get’s A+ from me in regards to ease of use with support for Linux. HP’s, not so much - what a struggle…
Basically all mine are from this list (or similar) Star Wars planet list
Instead of buying small VPS’s like this, why not just use OCI free tier? Their ARM compute performs pretty damn good.
Yes I know it’s Oracle (buuuuh), but this free tier/ARM compute is actually pretty good. Used it before to deploy stuff like Mastodon etc.
From the site:
Arm Compute Instance Arm-based Ampere A1 cores and 24 GB of memory usable as 1 VM or up to 4 VMs
Always Free 3,000 OCPU hours and 18,000 GB hours per month
I personally just use NPM in front of all of the services I make available public. It’s easy and handles the let’s encrypt certificates also.
From my Ubiquity router I just have port 80 and 443 forwarded to the NPM.
Yeah, you a right. Didn’t read that requirement carefully enough.
Will drop migadu into the pool of sugestions.
I would not go down the route of doing it myself. Take a look at something like: migadu if it is simple mail hosting you are looking for.
Excalidraw in combination with wikijs, both self hosted of course thru portainer.